Peter Mandelson

Peter Mandelson, in full Peter Benjamin Mandelson, (born Oct. 21, 1953, London, Eng.), British politician, who was a leading adviser to British Prime Minister Tony Blair, a member of the British House of Commons (1992–2004), and business secretary (2008–10) under Prime Minister Gordon Brown.

The grandson of Herbert Morrison, deputy prime minister during the Labour Party government of 1945–51, Mandelson was interested in politics from a young age. A brief flirtation with communism ended while he was a student at St. Catherine’s College, Oxford, and he became a member of the Labour Party. After receiving his degree in philosophy, politics, and economics, he joined the staff of the Trades Union Congress. In 1979 Mandelson, by then a committed Labour Party moderate, was elected to Lambeth borough council in South London, but he resigned in 1982, disillusioned with the borough’s left-wing leadership.

That same year Mandelson became a producer of a weekly television political program, Weekend World, a vantage point that sharpened his view of Labour’s defects and the party’s need to modernize its politics and appeal. In 1985 Mandelson was appointed Labour’s director of communications by party leader Neil Kinnock. He promoted Kinnock’s modernization agenda and ensured high media profiles for some of Labour’s rising stars, then in their 30s, such as Blair and Brown.

In 1992 Mandelson was elected Labour MP for Hartlepool, a coastal town in northeastern England. In 1997, following Labour’s return to government and Blair’s election as prime minister, Mandelson became a middle-ranking minister. A year later he was promoted to the cabinet as trade and industry secretary, but he resigned in December 1998 following the disclosure that he had borrowed money from a fellow minister to buy a house and had not officially declared the fact. By October 1999, however, Blair felt that Mandelson had paid an adequate price for his mistake and returned him to the cabinet as Northern Ireland secretary. A second resignation came in January 2001, after allegations surfaced that he had acted improperly over the issuing of British passports to two wealthy Indian businessmen.

A subsequent inquiry exonerated Mandelson, but he accepted that he was never likely to be given a third chance to join Blair’s cabinet. Nevertheless, he remained a close ally of Blair’s, especially in arguing that Britain should work more closely with the rest of the EU member countries. In 2004 Mandelson was appointed Britain’s member of the EU Commission and given the EU trade portfolio. The appointment was a logical way of both pursuing a pro-European strategy and bringing Mandelson’s troubled domestic political career to an end. In 2008, however, Mandelson left his EU post after Brown named him business secretary, thereby returning him to the cabinet. Because he had resigned from the House of Commons in 2004, Mandelson was made a peer in the House of Lords in order to join the government. He lost his cabinet position when Labour was ousted from office in May 2010. Several months later Mandelson published The Third Man, a memoir that garnered much publicity for its candid account of the Labour Party.